Similar to helpy-helpington-ism. Tendency to offer unsolicited help to attendees of a Zoom session, even when logged in purely as a participant.
Unable to repress his co-host-dependency, he directed participants and answered questions as they entered the videochat, forcing the actual hosts and co-hosts to clarify and redirect. Zoomified, he muted his mic and turned off his camera.
by Jules.Sheehy April 05, 2021
My co-granduncle-in-law is a good person.
by Wonbig October 13, 2021
by Tommy March 31, 2005
girl who is second-best to the real cheerleading captain. usually follows the captain around, and tries to have a higher part in the squad(even though shes not much better than the rest of the team)
*but sometimes they can also be very good cheerleaders, just too wanna-bee or too much of a follower to be an actual captain.
*but sometimes they can also be very good cheerleaders, just too wanna-bee or too much of a follower to be an actual captain.
Person 1- Are you the captain of the cheerleading squad?
Co-captain- no, im the cheerleading co-captain
person 1- oh.
Co-captain- no, im the cheerleading co-captain
person 1- oh.
by fdsljfhoewu October 27, 2009
1. Polish for "What an ace" (roughly)
2. A forced internet meme thanks to Ray William Johnson, who thinks he is the shit. He was trying to pronounce polish comments in a video he was reviewing, and the tweens who watch him became enthralled with this phrase.
2. A forced internet meme thanks to Ray William Johnson, who thinks he is the shit. He was trying to pronounce polish comments in a video he was reviewing, and the tweens who watch him became enthralled with this phrase.
by R0FLBOB March 03, 2011
“Co za asy” is a Polish phrase and video comment posted by YouTube user MrMal on a FAILblog video and later popularized through a webisode by YouTube personality Ray William Johnson. The phrase is roughly translated into “What an ace…” in English, though in the context of FAILblog video, it is likely the comment was written in sarcasm.
Because the phrase "co za asy" is so fun ( and catchy) to say it is being commented on almost every video that has to do with the Polish.
Because the phrase "co za asy" is so fun ( and catchy) to say it is being commented on almost every video that has to do with the Polish.
by Stuntmanuel123 March 11, 2011
Polish phrase trending on YouTube. It roughly translates to "look at these aces" and is usually sarcastically used to point out a dumbass.
by Doctor Jello February 27, 2011